Thai courts hand down record sentences for royal Facebook insults

1Insulted: Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, in a military parade in Bangkok in 2007.
2Bangkok: Thai military courts have jailed two people, one for 30 years and the other for 28 years, for insulting the monarchy, the heaviest sentences for the crime in the country's history, lawyers and a legal monitoring group said.
3Thailand's lese-majeste laws are the world's harshest and make it a crime to defame, insult or threaten the monarchy.
4The punishments come at a time of heightened anxiety over the health of the revered King Bhumibol , 87.
5The world's longest-reigning monarch, King Bhumibol has been in hospital since being admitted for a check-up on May 31.
6Nervousness over the succession has formed the backdrop to a decade of political crisis in Thailand as exiled former prime minister Thaksin and his allies have vied for political power with the establishment, dominated by the royalist military.
7Friday's sentences are the latest in a surge in prosecutions and jail time for lese-majeste offences since Thailand's military took power in a May 2014 coup.
8Military courts try most cases, in a junta-led crackdown that rights groups call an assault on free speech.
9Pongsak , 48, was initially given a sentence of 60 years for six Facebook posts between 2013 and 2014, his lawyer, Sasinan Thamnithinan, said.
10But the time was halved because he pleaded guilty, told Reuters.
11Pongsak, a self-described "red shirt" supporter of Thaksin, was shackled on his hands and feet for the hearing in a Bangkok courtroom that lasted less than an hour and was closed to the media.
12Military prosecutors and court officials declined to comment on Pongsak's case.
13In the northern city of Chiang Mai, another military court halved a jail term of 56 years for a 29-year-old woman, Sasivimol, who pleaded guilty, said Yingcheep , a researcher at legal monitoring group iLaw.
14The woman, who wanted only her first name used, was convicted for seven Facebook posts that insulted the royals, Yingcheep told Reuters.
15"As far as we have recorded, these are the heaviest sentences for lese-majeste in history," he said.
16Since the 2014 coup, authorities have charged at least 51 people with lese-majeste, including 24 convictions, a sharp rise over previous years, iLaw data shows.
17Military courts usually give offenders up to 10 years on each count, double the figure before the coup, Yingcheep said.